Jamaica Gleaner

Opposition leader faces deadline for standing down in race against Maduro

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IT’S HER choice – but one on which the hopes of millions of Venezuelan­s fighting to restore their democracy depends.

Barred from running for office, opposition leader María Corina Machado is facing pressure from foreign leaders and fellow government opponents to abandon her dead-end presidenti­al candidacy ahead of a March 25 candidate registrati­on deadline and make space for a substitute to take on the entrenched incumbent, Nicolás Maduro.

It’s an impossible choice that underlines Venezuela’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian tilt. The last election widely recognised as meeting internatio­nal standards took place almost a decade ago, when the opposition swept control of the National Assembly in 2015. But the opposition’s boycotting of subsequent races has only strengthen­ed Maduro’s grip on power.

Machado, a former lawmaker, rose to the top of the opposition leadership in 2023, filling a void left when other leaders went into exile. Her courage and principled attack on government corruption and Maduro’s mismanagem­ent of the oil-dependent economy rallied millions of Venezuelan­s to overwhelmi­ngly vote for her in an October opposition primary that the government tried to outlaw.

Success made her a target, though. In January, in defiance of an electoral agreement Maduro signed with an opposition coalition, which earned him relief from US economic sanctions, Venezuela’s rubber-stamping high court affirmed Machado’s ban on holding office.

Maduro’s government has since also accused Washington of conspiring to assassinat­e him, arrested more political opponents and expelled the staff of the UN Office of the High Commission­er for Human Rights.

NO INTEREST

Taken together, the actions indicate Maduro has no interest in a competitiv­e race and is looking only to extend his decade-long rule, said Michael McKinley, who served as US ambassador to Afghanista­n, Brazil, Colombia and Peru.

“We’re no longer dealing with an imperfect electoral process,” McKinley said. “It’s a complete shutdown of all meaningful challenges to Maduro. In that context, it’s hard to argue that the opposition participat­ing in elections without Machado and with a token candidate somehow advances a democratic opening.”

Polling suggests that Venezuelan­s overwhelmi­ngly want to go to the polls, and would trounce Maduro if given half a chance. And while Machado is their preferred candidate, a majority of opposition supporters want her to yield to someone else, rather than have the opposition essentiall­y sit out the race in which Maduro will be seeking a third six-year term.

“We’re with Maria Corina until the end,” retiree Sonia Alfonzo said, echoing Machado’s campaign slogan of “Hasta el final” – Until the end. “But if she can’t run, she must have an ace up her sleeve.”

Machado has repeatedly rejected the idea of renouncing her candidacy, but she has not explained her strategy to overcome the ban. Gerardo Blyde, who negotiated the opposition’s electoral agreement with Maduro’s representa­tives, told a radio station Friday “that there is still time” for the government to rectify and “allow our candidacy without obstructio­ns”.

But other allies are already floating a plan B. Two-time opposition presidenti­al candidate Henrique Capriles this week urged fellow Maduro opponents to get “a sense of realism” and rally behind an alternativ­e. Capriles, who exited the primary as support for Machado increased during the campaign, asked them to put Venezuelan­s and “the country above all else”.

The pressure is coming from outside Venezuela as well. Brazil’s leftist President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva recently held up his own inability to run for president in 2018, while he was fighting corruption charges from jail, as an example for Machado to follow.

“Instead of crying, I appointed another candidate,” said Lula, who was later cleared of criminal wrongdoing.

Machado’s meteoric rise as opposition leader last year was aided by careful messaging that softened her image as an elitist hardliner and allowed her to connect with sceptics. But throughout 2023, ruling-party leaders made clear she would never face off with Maduro.

There has been bad blood for decades between Machado and the disciples of Maduro’s mentor and predecesso­r, the late fiery leader Hugo Chávez.

 ?? AP ?? Opposition coalition presidenti­al hopeful María Corina Machado speaks to supporters at a campaign event in Caracas, Venezuela.
AP Opposition coalition presidenti­al hopeful María Corina Machado speaks to supporters at a campaign event in Caracas, Venezuela.

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